Qt for Python/GettingStarted/X11: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Qt for Python]] | [[Category:Qt for Python]] | ||
==== | == Official documentation == | ||
Refer to the [https://doc.qt.io/qtforpython/gettingstarted-linux.html official docs] to get started on Linux/X11. | |||
== Development == | == Development == | ||
Development happens in the 5. | Development happens in the 5.15 and dev branches of the [http://code.qt.io/cgit/pyside/pyside-setup.git/ pyside-setup repository]. | ||
The top level repository has the following submodules: | The top level repository has the following submodules: | ||
* sources/pyside2-tools: | * sources/pyside2-tools: pyside2-lupdate | ||
Contributions follow the [[Qt_Project_Guidelines|standard process]]. | Contributions follow the [[Qt_Project_Guidelines|standard process]]. |
Latest revision as of 10:56, 2 January 2020
Official documentation
Refer to the official docs to get started on Linux/X11.
Development
Development happens in the 5.15 and dev branches of the pyside-setup repository.
The top level repository has the following submodules:
- sources/pyside2-tools: pyside2-lupdate
Contributions follow the standard process.
It is helpful to have debug binaries or symbols for Python available. Debug packages can be installed separately in some Linux distributions (e.g.: Ubuntu, the packages python3-dbg, libpython3-dbg provide a debug binary python3-dbg)
If your distribution does not include them, you can download python sources and compile it by yourself, e.g.
./configure --prefix=/where/to/install/python/path CFLAGS="-O0 -fno-inline -fno-omit-frame-pointer -g" LDFLAGS="-O0" CPPFLAGS="-O0" OPT="-O0 -g" make make install
It is also recommended to use a Virtual Environment for testing to be able to always start from a clean base and avoid issues with write permissions in installations.
A new virtual environment can be created as follows:
virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3-dbg testenv
Please take into consideration that the binary name might be different in your system, and that you can choose a different name for the environment instead of testenv.
Troubleshooting
- Wrong RUNPATH / rpath
If you choose to build Python from sources in shared library configuration, it might be the case that the rpath is not set properly, which means that the built python binary might use the system python shared library, instead of the custom build shared library. You can patch the interpreter rpath values with a binary that PySide2 provides:
cd pyside-setup ./patchelf --set-rpath /path/to/your/local/python/lib /path/to/your/python/virtualenv/binary/python
And then you can proceed to re-install PySide2. (you can check if the patch worked with readelf -d /path/to/your/python/virtualenv/binary/python)
- Missing libICU causes linking problems
From 5.9+ you can get a copy of libICU by specifying --standalone (but not including --iculib-url) as an argument to setup.py execution.
- Recompile with -fPIC
This issue is usually encountered when using pyenv in a Linux distribution. It's necessary to reinstall python using pyenv with the following addendum:
env PYTHON_CFLAGS=-fPIC pyenv install -v 2.7.8